Aston Martin Project DP215 – 1963
After the DBR1’s success, Aston’s owner and director David Brown decided to move the company’s attention away from motorsport and back towards road cars. With so much motorsport experience, however, and with dealerships all over the world writing letters to Brown asking for a race car to use as a marketing tool, Brown gave the nod to what would become the Aston Martin ‘project cars’.
The first ‘Design Project’ was the DP212, a car that used the DB4 GT as a starting point but with a modified chassis, an entirely new, more aerodynamic body and the straight-six engine now bored out to 4.0-litres. At Le Mans in 1962, its first outing, it qualified in fifth position, driven by Graham Hill and Richie Ginther. Sadly it failed to finish the race, and Hill and Ginther complained of aerodynamic issues at high speeds, but Aston Martin was back on track.
Then came the DP214, of which two were built, and unlike the DP212 these were designed to race not just at Le Mans but elsewhere, and as a result they were even further removed from the DB4 GT starting point. Sections of the chassis were drilled out to make it lighter ( just under 200kg less than a DB4 GT), the engine was moved back into the chassis by eight inches, the DB4 GT’s engine was modified further, and a new nose and tail were fitted to stop the front end lifting. Although one of the two cars was destroyed in a crash during practice for the 1964 Nürburgring 1,000km, sadly killing the driver Brian Hetreed, the DP214 secured numerous podiums and three wins, the first with Salvadori at the wheel in the ‘Coppa Inter-Europa’, a support race for the Italian Grand Prix at Monza.
It was the final ‘Project car’ in the series, however, the DP215, that’s regarded as the finer machine. A new car was needed for the 1963 Le Mans 24, but it was needed quickly. Very quickly, in fact. Aston Martin engineers had just eight weeks and a budget of £1,500 to get the car made, something that Chief Engineer Ted Cutting relished. Underneath, although similar in appearance to the other DP cars, the engine, a 4.0-litre straight-six, was now mounted a full ten inches further back than in DP212.
Did it make it to Le Mans? Absolutely, and not only did it make it to Le Mans but it was quick too, as at the hands of Phil Hill and Lucien Bianchi it was lapping six seconds faster than the Ferrari 330 LMB in the same class and 12 seconds faster than the Ferrari 250 GTOs in the GT class. While the gearbox gave up after two hours, unable to take the 4.0-litre’s torque, it got up to a 198.6mph on the Mulsanne Straight, the first car to break 300km/h, or 186mph, at Le Mans.
It raced just once more, and sadly recorded another DNF, before crashing on the M1 at 100mph in 1966… Lovingly restored it has since been to Goodwood on numerous occasions, and in 2017 sold for $21,455,000, roughly £15.9m.